The Star Early Edition

Barca to fight latest Uefa fine

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MADRID: Barcelona have vowed to use all legal means to fight a second fine imposed by Uefa after fans displayed pro-Catalan independen­ce flags during September’s Champions League Group E match at home to Bayer Leverkusen.

Barca were already fined 30 000 (R450 000) by European soccer’s Swiss-based governing body in July after supporters waved the flags, known as Esteladas, and chanted pro-independen­ce slogans at the Champions League final in Berlin.

Uefa’s Control, Ethics and Disciplina­ry Body ruled the club had breached article 16 (2)(e) of the regulation­s, which prohibits “the use of gestures, words, objects or any other means to transmit any message that is not fit for a sports event, particular­ly messages that are of a political, ideologica­l, religious, offensive or provocativ­e nature”.

Jordi Mestre, a Barca vice president, said on Monday the club would appeal the latest Uefa sanction of

40 000 and would take their legal fight to the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg if necessary.

“We will appeal to Uefa, to the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport (CAS), if necessary to the ordinary Swiss courts and if needed we will go to Strasbourg,” Mestre told reporters in Minsk where Barca were preparing for yesterday’s Champions League match against BATE Borisov.

“We will continue to defend the interests of the club and we’ll see what happens, we are not in the least happy,” he added.

“We will follow the process set out by Uefa, we will not wage a war but defend the club’s interests. We will never allow a limit on people’s freedom of expression.”

Barca, whose motto is “More than a club”, has long been an outlet for fans who support Catalan independen­ce from Spain to express their beliefs.

Supporters of the club were criticised by politician­s from Spain’s ruling People’s Party (PP) after they whistled the Catalan national anthem at the King’s Cup final at the end of May. – Reuters

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